Palin Joins Armey as Republicans Aid Tea Party Takeover

By Jonathan D. Salant -
Aug 12, 2010

The pitch came at the end of Rand Paul’s conference call with 2,000 potential supporters:

Go online to donate to Paul, the Kentucky Republican Senate
candidate who is courting Tea Party activists. Or press seven to
give $25 to FreedomWorks, the advocacy organization headed by
former House Majority Leader Dick Armey that sponsored the July
13 call, said Matt Kibbe, the group’s president.

Even as candidates such as Paul tout their anti-
establishment credentials, much of their financial clout comes
from veteran Republicans such as Armey, former Alaska Governor
Sarah Palin, South Carolina Senator Jim DeMint and onetime U.S.
Representative Chris Chocola, who aim to reshape their party.

“This movement is a hostile takeover of the Republican
Party,” Kibbe said of the Tea Party, a loose collection of
activists who favor lower taxes, government spending cuts and
the repeal of a law overhauling U.S. health care.

FreedomWorks, which also advocates less government and
lower taxes, hosted some 50 Tea Party activists in Washington
last weekend to train them in organizing, such as going door-to-
door to help candidates challenging established Republicans in
this year’s elections. Many activists are also vying for
positions on local Republican Party committees.

“Starting a third party is not the answer,” said Ana
Puig, co-leader of the Kitchen Table Patriots, a group in Bucks
County, Pennsylvania, that joined in the training. “We have to
work with the party that is most closely aligned with us.”

Nod From Palin

Republicans such as Armey, 70, DeMint, 58, and Palin, 46,
help put challengers on the Tea Party’s radar screen through e-
mails, social-networking sites and conference calls. Armey’s
group says it has 576,000 e-mail addresses and 230,000 Facebook
friends.

Palin, the 2008 Republican nominee for vice president, has
amassed her own Facebook army of almost 2 million followers and
is endorsing congressional candidates around the country. A nod
from Palin for Joe Miller, who is taking on Alaska Senator Lisa Murkowski in the Aug. 24 Republican primary, gave him higher
name recognition among Tea Party supporters, activists say.

Talk radio and blogs tout those candidates and make them
“the ones the small donors get excited about,” said Joe
Wierzbicki, coordinator of the Tea Party Express, whose parent
group is the largest Tea Party political action committee.

Besides giving directly to the campaigns, some supporters
donate to groups including the antitax Club for Growth, based in
Washington and headed by former Indiana Republican
Representative Chocola, and DeMint’s PAC, which forward the cash
to the candidates.

‘Handiwork’ of Professionals

DeMint’s Senate Conservatives Fund raised $75,380 in June
for Ken Buck, a county district attorney in Colorado, and spent
$136,853 on his behalf through July 26. That helped Buck defeat
former Lieutenant Governor Jane Norton this week in the state’s
Republican U.S. Senate primary.

“The Tea Party movement is the handiwork of professional
politicians rather than a ‘spontaneous’ grassroots effort,”
said Linda Fowler, a professor of government at Dartmouth
College in Hanover, New Hampshire. “Inevitably, when a
political party loses the White House, a battle rages over who
will control its future.”

At the annual Conservative Political Action Conference in
Washington in February, Armey’s group endorsed Utah lawyer Mike
Lee for the Senate over Robert Bennett, a Republican seeking his
fourth term. The Club for Growth spent more than $180,000
against the incumbent. DeMint’s PAC raised $59,334 for Lee in
June, contributed $5,000 to his campaign and spent $133,458 on
his behalf through July 26. Lee won the June primary.

Small Donations

Much of that money comes from small donations. One-third of
the $2.1 million raised by DeMint’s PAC and almost half the
$182,428 collected by FreedomWorks from January through June
this year were from donations of less than $200, U.S. Federal
Election Commission data show.

In Kentucky, Paul, 47, raised $3.5 million through June 30,
with $1.6 million, or 46 percent, in contributions of less than
$200. His Democratic opponent, state Attorney General Jack Conway, raised $3.4 million, with 7 percent, $234,536, from
donations under $200.

Former Florida House Speaker Marco Rubio, the likely
Republican U.S. Senate candidate, collected $11.2 million
through June, with $4.1 million, 37 percent, in small donations.
Rubio was boosted by Tea Party support, prompting a rival for
the party’s Senate nomination, Governor Charlie Crist, to run as
an independent. Crist took in 2 percent of his $12 million from
small donors.

‘More Like Them’

Tea Party supporters were key to former state lawmaker
Sharron Angle’s win in the June 8 Nevada Republican Senate
primary. The Tea Party Express spent more than $500,000 on
behalf of Angle, who is facing Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid
in November.

Angle reported raising $3.5 million, with $2.1 million in
donations of less than $200, through June 30. Reid raised $19.2
million, with $1.3 million, 7 percent, from small donors.

“The Tea Party movement fits neatly within the right wing
of the Republican Party,” said Gary Jacobson, a political
science professor at the University of California in San Diego.
People like Armey and DeMint see it “as a vehicle for making
the Republican Party more like them.”

As for the July 13 conference call for Paul, FreedomWorks
said it collected more than $10,000. Paul’s campaign manager
Jesse Benton called it “a strong online fundraising day.”